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Building: (Building B) Faculty of Law, Administration & Economics , Floor: 3rd floor, Room: 302
Friday 17:50 - 19:30 CEST (06/09/2019)
The common perception of authoritarianism combines a centralized state with an omnipotent dictator or dominant party. During the past decades, however, we have witnessed a growing heterogeneity of authoritarian regime types. This heterogeneity is not only evident in the cross-national comparison but also sub-nationally. Sub-national entities in authoritarian states vary not only demographically and by their degree of political autonomy. They also map a multifaceted landscape in their degree of authoritarianism or democracy, patterns of regional support for the dominant party and incumbent, competitiveness and electoral domination, concrete policies, et cetera. This panel seeks to highlight these sub-national variations in authoritarian states and their concrete effects on politics.
Title | Details |
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A New Hope? Decentralisation in Morocco and Tunisia between Regime Change and Stabilisation | View Paper Details |
Patterns of Loyalism: Explaining Excessive Compliance of Officials in an Authoritarian State at the Regional Level | View Paper Details |
Conservatism in Russian Orthodoxy and its Relation to Politics on the Local Level | View Paper Details |
Competitiveness and Turnout in Russian Gubernatorial Elections | View Paper Details |